ANSI Z-10 Implementation: A Case Study Corp Z-10 Case Study.pdfANSI Z-10 Implementation: A Case...
Transcript of ANSI Z-10 Implementation: A Case Study Corp Z-10 Case Study.pdfANSI Z-10 Implementation: A Case...
ANSI Z-10 Implementation:A Case Study
Presented by:Kyle B. Dotson, CIH, CSP, BCEE
DOTSON Group, LLCwww.dotsongroup.com
ANSI Z-10 Case StudyCalpine Corporation, 2005
A major power company. 90 power plants in 21 U.S. states and 3 provinces in Canada.
2004 - Named one of America’s Safest Companies by Occupational Hazards magazine. 2005 – Implemented ANSI-Z10 “safety upgrade”.2005 - Four sites designated as OSHA VPP Stars.
Important Note: I served as VP, SHE until July 2006 but no longer represent Calpine.Bankruptcy filed Dec 2005, now restructured out of Chapter 11 and doing well.Relocated from San Jose, CA to Houston, TX.
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Power Generation Industry Average (2003 BLS Data)
Calpine Corp (2005)
Calpine Corp (2004)
*Standard OSHA Lost Time Injury Rates per 200,000 Work Hours
Safety Performance “Excellent”Before ANSI Z-10 Implementation
PolicyNew Calpine Safety and Health Policy based on solid safety
management theory (culture, systems, behavior, risk).
CultureTop Down “Personal” video with CEO, Plant & Sr. Mgrs.
Employee Perception Survey providing “bottom up” feedback.Bottom Up employee pride from OSHA VPP “Stars”.
System40 Safety Guidelines. (One page each; 20 page Model Procedures).
Modeled on OSHA VPP, now moving to ANSI Z10. Site staff safety mgmt education. CSP/CIH qualified Regionalized staff.
AuditsAnnual External Corporate Strategy and Regulatory Review.
Internal Audits. Self-Assessment by Sites of conformance to Guidelines.
MetricsExternal Benchmark of LTA Rates (Site Goal=0, Corp Goal=Improve).
Leading Indicator: Web track “% Improvement in Conformance with 40 Guidelines”
Safety Programs were “Good”Before ANSI-Z10 Implementation
Z-10 Project Utilized a “Best Practice Management Model” for Process Change in Large Organizations
1) Establishing a Sense of Urgency
2) Creating the Guiding Coalition
3) Developing a Vision and Strategy
4) Communicating a Shared Vision
5) Empowering Broad-Based Action
6) Generating Short-Term Wins
7) Consolidating Gains, Producing More
8) Anchoring New Practices in Culture
From the book Leading Changeby John Kotter, Harvard Business Press
Establishing a Sense of Urgency “System” called “key weakness” in 2004 Strategic Safety Review
Safety CultureTrust, Shared
Goals/Norms, Problem-Solving, Pro-Activity,
Flexibility, Cooperation, Quest for Best Practice,
Citizenship Behavior
Facility Risk
Safe Behaviors• Managerial Active Support of Employee Safety and Related
Organizational Goals• Employee Daily Commitment
to Self and Peer Safety
Safety SystemsPolicy, Supportive Framework, Enabling
Processes and Tools, Performance Measurement and Corrective Action
Programs (reactive, lacks integrated process, usually
doesn’t get fixed or improved until its broken)
Systems (proactive, standard process for continuously
assuring and improving Element effectiveness)
Creating the Guiding Coalition “Systems” support, praised by internal “Maint Best Practice” group
SAFETY MANAGEMENT ELEMENTS –The 40 Calpine Safety and Health Management Guidelines (SHGs) will continue to
define the elements of safety that we manage at Calpine.Calpine SHG 01 that defines Roles and Responsibilities for Safety will be
revised significantly. (We will ADD “management review”)
SAFETY MANAGEMENT SYSTEM –The ANSI-Z10 process will be used to define the system processes that will be used to “plan, do, check, act” aspects of assuring that
we “continuously improve” all elements of safety management at Calpine in the future. Calpine SHG 02 that defines our Corporate Safety Programs and Processes
for Safety will be revised significantly. (We will ADD “management review”)
“Some organizations already have developed an effective OHSMS appropriate to their needs but that may not conform precisely to this standard. In those
instances, the standard may serve as a voluntary tool to identify possible opportunities to improve their systems.”1
1 Reference: ASC Z10 200X (draft) Occupational Health and Safety Management Systems
Developing a Vision and Strategy“We will revise TWO of our 40 Safety Elements”
Plant # 1Plant # 2Plant # 3Plant # 4Plant # 5Plant # 6Plant # 7Plant # 8Plant # 9Plant # 10
Print Finished
Communicating a Shared Vision, Empowering Broad-Based Action Online Tracking of % Implemented =Plant Mgr 2005 Perf Goal + Reports to SVP in Weekly Ops Call
•Red indicates Process is <70% Complete•Yellow indicates Process is >69% but less than 99% Complete
•At 100% Implementation, Chart will be solid Green•Next to bottom row is Plant Average
•Bottom Row is Business Unit Avg or Total Corporate Avg•Rolling Cursor over squares gives numerical score
Generating Short-Term WinsPlants Can Implement “Easiest First”
Consolidating Gains, Producing More - Best PracticeTeam praised / shared best plant practices as examples. External ORC benchmark used to provide Corp with Positive Feedback
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Source: 2005 ORC OS&H Group, www.orc-sac.com
Calpine 40 Elements + ANSI-Z10(WITH 100% implementation)
Evaluation Criteria:Leadership Commitment and Support; Employee Involvement; Risk Identification Elimination, and Safe Practices; Accountability; and Continuous Improvement.
“Leading indicators are the performance drivers that communicate how outcome measures are to be achieved.” Robert S. Kaplan and David P. Norton, The Balanced Scorecard
Calpine 40 Elements WITHOUT ANSI-Z10
Dec 2003 Dec 2005
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Anchoring New Practices in Culture – Internal S&H Management Guidelines + ANSI Z-10 are Integrated with Environmental Criteria for Annual External Audit
Summary – John Kotter’s “Leading Change” Model as Applied to Calpine’s ANSI-Z10 Implementation
1) Establishing a Sense of UrgencyExternal safety expert identified “System” as our “key weakness”. ANSI Z-10 discussed with
Management as wave of future. Implementation put in 2005 Corp Goals for Plant Mgrs.
2) Creating the Guiding CoalitionGot Regional Safety Pro’s on board, Legal on board, used Maintenance Best Practice group to support
move to safety “System”.
3) Developing a Vision and Strategy Gap Analysis served as key strategy document. Goal set to “revise two of 40 corporate guidelines and
implement to meet new voluntary standard”.
4) Communicating a Shared VisionOnline real-time tracking tool was key. So was verbal reports to SVP in weekly operations call.
Summary – John Kotter’s “Leading Change” Model as Applied to Calpine’s ANSI-Z10 Implementation
5) Empowering Broad-Based ActionPutting it in the annual performance goals of plant managers and having it driven weekly by Ops
Mgmt assured it was done.
6) Generating Short-Term WinsAllowing Plants to Choose to Implement easiest first built buy-in.
7) Consolidating Gains, Producing More Praise by Best Practice Team of leading plants in mgmt call helped a lot. Others were quick to copy.
8) Anchoring New Practices in CultureIntegrated pre-existing safety guidelines and ANSI Z-10 and existing environmental requirements
into external audit criteria. Definition of roles and responsibilities for everyone especially for the new management review process was a significant upgrade.
Questions and Comments?
Thanks!
Kyle B. Dotson, CIH, CSP, BCEEDOTSON Group, LLC
PO Box 1767, Los Altos, CA 94023Office: 650-559-5712 Fax: 650-559-5713
Email: [email protected]